U.S. and Arabs allies launch first strikes on fighters in Syria
23/9/14
The United States and its Arab allies bombed Syria for the first time on Tuesday, killing
scores of Islamic State fighters and members of a separate al Qaeda-linked
group, opening a new front against militants by joining a three-year-old civil
war.
U.S.
Central Command said Bahrain, Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates participated in or supported the strikes against Islamic State targets
around the eastern cities of Raqqa, Deir al-Zor, Hasakah and Albu Kamal.
Warplanes and ship-launched
Tomahawk cruise missiles struck "fighters, training compounds,
headquarters and command and control facilities, storage facilities, a finance
center, supply trucks and armed vehicles," it said.
Washington also said
U.S. forces had acted alone to launch eight strikes in another area of Syria against the "Khorasan
Group", an al Qaeda unit U.S. officials have described in recent days as
posing a threat similar to that from Islamic State.
The Syrian Observatory
for Human Rights, which monitors the war in Syria, said at least 70 Islamic
State fighters were killed in strikes that hit at least 50 targets in Raqqa and
Deir al-Zor and Hasakah provinces in Syria's east.
It said at least 50
fighters and eight civilians were killed in strikes targeting al Qaeda's Syrian
affiliate, the Nusra Front, in northern Aleppo
and Idlib provinces, apparently referring to the strikes the Americans said
targeted Khorasan.
The Observatory said
most of the Nusra Front fighters killed were not Syrians.
The air attacks
fulfill President Barack Obama's pledge to strike in Syria
against Islamic State, a Sunni Muslim group that has seized swathes of Syria and Iraq, imposing a mediaeval
interpretation of Islam, slaughtering prisoners and ordering Shi'ites and
non-Muslims to convert or die.
SYRIAN GOVERNMENT INFORMED
In a sign of how Islamic State's rise has
blurred lines in Middle East conflicts, the Syrian government said Washington
had informed it hours before the strikes in a letter from Secretary of State
John Kerry sent through his Iraqi counterpart.
A Syrian foreign ministry statement
refrained from criticizing the U.S.-led action and said Damascus would continue to attack Islamic
State and was ready to cooperate with any international effort to fight
terrorism.
Only a year ago Washington was on the verge of bombing the
Syrian government to punish it for using chemical weapons, before Obama
canceled those strikes at the last minute.
A Syrian analyst interviewed on
tightly-controlled state TV said the air strikes did not amount to an act of
aggression because the government had been notified in advance.
"This does not mean we are part of
the joint operations room, and we are not part of the alliance. But there is a
common enemy," said the analyst, Ali al-Ahmad.
Residents reached by telephone in Raqqa,
Islamic State's de facto capital in eastern Syria, said people were fleeing for
the countryside after the bombs started falling overnight.
Islamic State vowed revenge against the United States.
"These attacks will be answered,"
an Islamic State fighter told Reuters by Skype from Syria,
blaming Saudi Arabia's
ruling family for allowing the strikes to take place.
The Sunni fighters, who have proclaimed a
caliphate ruling over all Muslims, shook the Middle East by sweeping through
northern Iraq
in June. They alarmed the West in recent weeks by beheading two U.S.
journalists and a British aid worker, raising fears that they could attack
Western countries.
The strikes took place hours before Obama
goes to the U.N. General Assembly in New
York where he will try to rally more nations behind
his drive to destroy Islamic State. The White House said he would make a
statement before setting off.
PITCHED
INTO CIVIL WAR
The action pitches Washington for the first time into the
three-year-old Syrian civil war, which began with "Arab Spring"
democracy protests but descended into a sectarian conflict that has killed
200,000 people, displaced millions and drawn in proxy forces backed by
countries across the region.
U.S. forces have
previously hit Islamic State targets in Iraq,
where Washington supports the government, but
had held back from a military engagement in Syria, where Obama still calls for
the downfall of President Bashar al-Assad. Washington has said it would not coordinate
operations against Islamic State with Assad's government.
Islamic State's Sunni fighters, now
equipped with U.S. weapons
seized during their advance in Iraq,
are among the most powerful opponents of Assad, a member of a Shi'ite-derived
sect. They are also battling against rival Sunni groups in Syria, against the Shi'ite-led government of Iraq and
against Kurdish forces on both sides of the border.
In recent days they have captured villages
from Kurds near Syria's
Turkish border, sending nearly 140,000 refugees across the frontier since last
week. The United Nations said it was bracing for up to 400,000 people to flee.
Washington wants to defeat the
fighters without helping Assad. Its Sunni Arab allies oppose Assad and his
sponsor Iran.
The Western-backed Syrian opposition,
which is fighting against both Assad and Islamic State, welcomed the air
strikes which it said would help defeat Assad.
The main Syrian Kurdish party welcomed the
U.S.
action and said it wanted to coordinate action against Islamic State.
The targets included Raqqa city, the main
headquarters in Syria of Islamic State fighters who have proclaimed a caliphate
stretching from Syria's Aleppo province through the Tigris and Euphrates river
valleys to the outskirts of Baghdad.
"There is an exodus out of Raqqa as
we speak," a resident said by phone. "It started in the early hours
of the day after the strikes. People are fleeing towards the countryside."
Photographs taken in Raqqa showed wreckage
of what Islamic State fighters said was a drone that had been shot down. Pieces
of the wreckage, including what appeared to be part of a propeller, were shown
loaded into the back of a van.
A video posted online, filmed through
night-vision apparatus, showed lights from jets flying overhead firing a stream
of projectiles at the ground. It was not clear where or when the video was
filmed.
Jordan, confirming its
participation, said its air force had bombed "targets that belong to some
terrorist groups that sought to commit terrorist acts inside Jordan."
It did not say where.
Israel shot down a Syrian
jet in air space it controls, but there was no sign the incident was linked to
the U.S.
action.
WEAPONS
SUPPLIES, CHECKPOINTS HIT
U.S. officials and the
Syrian Observatory said buildings used by the militants, their weapons supplies
and checkpoints were targeted in the attacks on Raqqa. Areas along the
Iraq-Syria border were also hit.
Residents in Raqqa had said last week that
Islamic State was moving underground after Obama signaled on Sept. 11 that air
attacks on its forces could be expanded from Iraq
to Syria.
The group had evacuated buildings it was
using as offices, redeployed its heavy weaponry, and moved fighters' families
out of the city, the residents said.
"They are trying to keep on the
move," said one Raqqa resident, communicating via the Internet and
speaking on condition of anonymity because of safety fears. "They only
meet in very limited gatherings."
The addition of Arab allies in the attacks
was crucial for the credibility of the American-led campaign. With the backing
of Jordan and the Gulf
monarchies, Washington
has the support of Sunni states hostile to Assad. It has not, however, won
support of Assad himself or his main regional ally, Shi'ite Iran.
None of Washington's
traditional Western allies has so far joined the campaign in Syria. Britain, which joined the United States in war in Iraq and Afghanistan last decade, said it
was still considering its options. France
has struck Islamic State in Iraq
but not in Syria,
citing legal constraints.
A militant group which kidnapped a
Frenchman in Algeria on
Sunday has threatened to kill him unless Paris
halts intervention in Iraq.
NATO ally Turkey, which is alarmed by Islamic
State but also worried about Kurdish fighters and opposed to any action that
might help Assad, has refused a military role in the coalition.
Assad's ally Russia, whose ties with
Washington are at their lowest since the end of the Cold War, said any strikes
in Syria are illegal without Assad's permission or a U.N. Security Council
resolution, which Moscow would have the right to veto.
Obama backed away from getting involved in
Syria's
civil war a year ago after threatening air strikes against Assad's government
over the use of chemical weapons. The rise of Islamic State prompted him to change
course and take action against Assad's most powerful opponents.
Washington says it hopes to
strengthen a moderate Syrian opposition to fill the vacuum so that it can
degrade Islamic State without helping Assad. But so far, the opposition groups
recognized as legitimate by the United
States and its allies have been a
comparatively weak force on the battlefield.
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